Tuesday, November 5

Meta fined $400 million in Europe for forcing users to agree to view ads

Meta announced that it plans to appeal the decision to have the fine withdrawn.
Meta announced that it plans to appeal the decision to have the fine withdrawn.

Photo: JOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images

Julian Castillo

The Irish Data Protection Commission announced that it has imposed a $400 million fine on Metathe parent company of Facebook, for having engaged in advertising practices and data management of its users that violated the privacy laws that govern the countries of the European Union.

The decision of the Irish regulator details that lThe sanction consists of two fines, the first being for an amount of $222.5 million dollars. for violations of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) of the European Union.

While the second, set at about $190 million dollars additional, it occurs for similar infractions, this time committed by Instagram. The total amount of the fines is estimated to be just over $410 million dollars.

The imposition of these fines occurs after years of investigations since the first investigations carried out by the Irish authorities date from more than four years ago when the GDPR came into force.

The slow pace with which these investigations progressed had caused the Irish authorities to be criticized for the delays in the process.

All this problem arises after, according to the Irish authorities, Meta used the personal information of its users to carry out personalized advertising. For this to happen, the European Union requires the user to give their express consent, something that on this occasion seems not to have happened.

The reason the target penalty is so high is because under Irish law, companies that infringe the laws on the way in which they can process the personal information of their users are exposed to receive penalties that can be equivalent to 4% of their global incomea figure that in the case of Meta amounts to several billion dollars annually.

“There has been a lack of regulatory clarity on this issue, and the debate between regulators and policymakers about which legal basis is the most appropriate in a given situation has been ongoing for some time,” a spokesperson for the company said. Goal after learning the decision of the Irish regulator.

From the company they expressed that they are not satisfied with the decision, because they consider that Meta’s way of operating fully complies with all the requirements set forth in the RGDP. For this reason announced that they plan to appeal the decision in search of a more favorable result that does not imply having to pay more than $400 million dollars in fines.

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– Google loses its appeal against the record fine imposed in the European Union